Culture | June 18, 2008 | 5 comments

What the Gay Brain Looks Like

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KristinL
What makes people gay? Biologists may never get a complete answer to that question, but researchers in Sweden have found one more sign that the answer lies in the structure of the brain.

Scientists at the Karolinska Institute studied brain scans of 90 gay and straight men and women, and found that the size of the two symmetrical halves of the brains of gay men more closely resembled those of straight women than they did straight men. In heterosexual women, the two halves of the brain are more or less the same size. In heterosexual men, the right hemisphere is slightly larger. Scans of the brains of gay men in the study, however, showed that their hemispheres were relatively symmetrical, like those of straight women, while the brains of homosexual women were asymmetrical like those of straight men.

The number of nerves connecting the two sides of the brains of gay men were also more like the number in heterosexual women than in straight men.
Just what these brain differences mean is still not clear. Ever since 1991, when Simon LeVay first documented differences in the hypothalamus of gay and straight men, researchers have been struggling to understand what causes these differences to occur. Until now, the brain regions that scientists have come to believe play a role in sexual orientation have been related to either reproduction or sexuality. The Swedish study, however, is the first to find differences in parts of the brain not normally involved in reproduction — the denser network of nerve connections, for example, was found in the amygdala, known as the emotional center of the brain. "The big question has always been, if the brains of gay men are different, or feminized, as earlier research suggests," says Dr. Eric Vilain, professor of human genetics at University of California Los Angeles, "then is it just limited to sexual preference or are there other regions that are gender atypical in gay males? For the first time, in this study it looks like there are regions of the brain not directly involved in sexuality that seem to be feminized in gay males."

Vilain, who studies the genetic factors behind sexuality and sexual orientation, notes that it may turn out that the brains of gay men possess only some 'feminized' structures, while retaining some masculine ones, and this is reflected in how they act on their sexuality. "We know from studies that men, regardless of their sexual orientation, retain masculine characteristics when it comes to their sexual behavior," he says. Both gay and straight men, for example, tend to prefer younger partners, in contrast to women, who gravitate toward older partners. Most men are also more likely than women to engage in casual sex, and to be aroused by visual stimuli. "So I expect that some regions of the brain will remain masculine even in gay men," says Vilain. For something as complex as sexual orientation, it's no surprise that everything from genes to gender to environment may play a role in ultimately determining your perfect partner.
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5 comments // What the Gay Brain Looks Like

  • Brockie
    • 0
      Brockie  
    • Oh my, this just opens a whole Pandora's box of questionable research. Just think of all the strange, weard or kinky people there are in this world. Will we have to do brain research on each and every one of them? After all don't we need to know why everyone is the way they are?

    • 3 years ago
  • JanaPokana
    • 0
      JanaPokana  
    • What exactly is the point of this research? People have been trying to find biological markers of sexual orientation for over a century without any conclusive or convincing results. The fact that scientists keep pushing this line of research just seems to point to the desire or urge to construct stable borders that safeguard the differences between homosexuals and heterosexuals.

      Another question is: how do bisexual people figure in this research? If a previously straight woman falls in love with another woman at the age of 50, do you think this is because of a sudden or spontaneous alteration of her brain? Or will her brain change because of her being attracted to a partner of the same sex?

    • 3 years ago
  • haleyann
  • magaikenus
    • 0
      magaikenus  
    • yeah maybe when we gays were developing fetuses in our mothers' wombs we had the opposite sex brain growing in the wrong little bodies. But then once we were born, by hormones and environment, we grew up in our assigned body gender but ended up being gay.

      My mom claimed before I was born that she thought I was going to be a boy because my heart rate was faster than a girl's heart rate is supposed to be. I wonder if my heart was beating faster because my lopsided-male brain knew it was in the wrong body?

      I definitely know I have a male brain when I'm watching a sexy woman do a strip tease!

    • 3 years ago
  • H3ADLINE
    • 0
      H3ADLINE  
    • magaikenus:

      no, it's not the case of an opposite gender brain mix up. There are still differences between homosexual male brains and heterosexual female brains, which makes the homosexual brain more of a hybrid between the two.

    • 3 years ago
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